In the first scene, a shop window reads "Roy Seawright Cleaners". Roy Seawright was the Roach Studios special effects technician.
Included among the American Film Institute's 2000 list of the 500 movies nominated for the Top 100 Funniest American Movies.
Press previews for the film in April, 1936 ran 85 minutes, but 15 minutes were cut for the released film in August, 1936. Billy Gilbert's role as "Fur Trader" did not survive the cut. It is not known if the preview print was shown anywhere to paying customers.
On all publicity material (lobby cards, posters, etc.) printed for the 1948 Favorite Films reissue, Charley Chase's name is omitted, while Billy Gilbert's name is included, even though his role as a fur trader was cut from the final release print of the film.
Though most all of the films publicity materials, from window cards to heralds, and newsprint adverts from around the English speaking world all insist on its being 90 minutes long, as if it were a major selling point, it comes up many minutes short. There are at least three scenes that are no longer in the print known now, the often discussed Billy Gilbert the fur dealer, another where Patsy confronts Harry Bernard , apparently a fight promoter in his office, and another where Patsy, Charley and Guinn are proudly showing off expensive clothes and furs they're wearing in a large living room. So perhaps these scenes were included at one time, to make the 90 minutes. The scenes described are in the set of stills to exploit the film during it's late 1940's reissue.